EconWatch.com > Holes in the Fence

[Economist's View] What does a national border represent in a world of electronic communication, multinational corporations, and increased migration of both labor and business?: Borders Aren't About Maps, by Moisés Naím Sunday Outlook. Washington Post: A country's borders should not be confused with those familiar dotted lines drawn on some musty old map of nation-states.

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http://turcopundit.blogspot.com [TurcoPundit] Foreign Press Review - April 10 2006: Commodity prices set to spiral even higher The five-year commodity price boom that has catapulted metal, energy and some agricultural prices to record highs is set to extend further, driven by global economic growth, tight supply and rising inflows of investment.

[Globalguerrillas.typepad.com] Global Guerrillas: BOOK REVIEW: ILLICIT by Moises Naim: Okay, I can see the trap Moises was in. He's a bona fide part of the establishment, and he can't exactly come out and say "well guys, if we stay in this paradigm we are doomed."

http://naim1.bravejournal.com [Naim1.bravejournal.com] Naim's Web Journal - Bravenet Web Journal: Perhaps Lebanon’s greatest archaeological and architectural attractions are the monumental Roman ruins in Baalbek, a small town 50 miles north-east of Beirut which was a Hezbollah stronghold during the civil war. The temples to Jupiter and Bacchus are in remarkably good condition, with columns soaring 22 metres high.

http://vikram.blogspot.com [Vikram.blogspot.com] FaeLLe: In his book, Illicit, Moisés Naím explains that the terrorists behind the 1993 World Trade Center bombing raised money by selling T-shirts on NewYork City’s Broadway, and the perpetrators of the 2004 Madrid train bombings sold counterfeited CDs and trafficked drugs to support their activities.

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